• Microsoft says Azure users will have to patch these worrying secu

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Fri Sep 17 17:45:04 2021
    Microsoft says Azure users will have to patch these worrying security flaws themselves

    Date:
    Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:25:44 +0000

    Description:
    Microsoft has issued patches for the easily exploitable vulnerabilities, but left it upon users to patch their vulnerable Azure instances.

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    Microsofts latest guidelines regarding the recently disclosed OMI vulnerabilities has put the onus on users to patch many of the affected Azure services.

    The September Patch Tuesday bundle shipped with fixes for four zero-day vulnerabilities in the open source software agent named Open Management Infrastructure (OMI), which is automatically deployed inside Linux virtual machines ( VM ) when users enable certain Azure services.

    However, instead of patching all affected Azure services, Microsoft has put
    an advisory stating that while itll update six of them, seven others must be updated by users themselves. TechRadar needs you!

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    Customers must update vulnerable extensions for their Cloud and On-Premises deployments as the updates become available per schedule outlined in table below...For cloud deployments with auto update turned on, Microsoft will actively deploy the updates to extensions across Azure regions as per the schedule in the table below, reads the advisory. High and dry

    The Register points out that Microsofts handling of the situation hasnt gone down well with security researchers.

    Theyve also failed to update their own systems in Azure to install the
    patched version on new VM deployments. Its honestly jaw dropping, tweeted security researcher Kevin Beaumont.

    Since Microsoft has left it upon users to patch the impacted services, it didnt take researchers long to discover vulnerable instances.

    There are 56 known exposed services worldwide that are likely vulnerable to this issue, including a major health organization and two major entertainment companies, wrote security vendor Censys after performing an impact
    assessment.

    While the number seems small, Censys reasons its probably because of how the OMI service responds to such scans, or perhaps because exposing OMI to the internet likely requires deliberate effort.

    In any case, since exploiting the vulnerability is a laughably easy trick according to Sophos, security researchers strongly urge users to patch any vulnerable OMI-using services in their Azure deployments without delay. Protect your devices with these best antivirus software

    Via The Register



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/news/microsoft-says-azure-users-will-have-to-patch-t hese-worrying-security-flaws-themselves/


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